DGCP Principle #30 — Disclosure vs Concealment Structure

Date: 2026-04-25 (Asia/Bangkok)
Project: MaMeeFarm™ Global System Observation
Framework: DGCP™ — Data Governance & Continuous Proof
Mode: Observation only • Principle definition • No prediction • No advice
Scope Note: Structural definition of disclosure and concealment as system behaviors affecting traceability and verification within DGCP systems


Principle Statement

Disclosure and concealment represent two distinct structural behaviors.

In DGCP™, system integrity is associated with the degree of observable and verifiable disclosure.


System Context

Systems may operate with partial visibility, where errors, gaps, or uncertainty are not fully recorded.

Such conditions reduce traceability and limit independent verification.

DGCP™ introduces structured disclosure, where observable conditions are explicitly recorded as part of system data.


Observed Pattern

Under disclosure conditions:

  • System state remains observable
  • Data can be independently verified
  • Gaps and errors are explicitly recorded

Under concealment conditions:

  • System state becomes partially unobservable
  • Verification capability is reduced
  • Unrecorded conditions accumulate

Structural Implication

DGCP™ structures disclosure through:

  • Explicit gap recording: Missing or delayed data is logged
  • Uncertainty visibility: Conditions are recorded without suppression
  • Error documentation: Issues are tracked within the system record

Disclosure operates as a structural component within the data system.

Verification depends on observable system state.


Conclusion

Disclosure maintains observable system structure.

Concealment reduces system visibility.

DGCP™ defines disclosure as a required condition for verifiable system integrity.


Signed,
P’Toh
System Architect — DGCP™


License:
DGCP | MMFARM-POL-2025
This work is licensed under the DGCP (Data Governance & Continuous Proof) framework.
All content is part of the MaMeeFarm™ Real-Work Data & Philosophy archive.
Redistribution, citation, or derivative use must preserve attribution and license reference.

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